Alum, graphic novelist wins national literary honor
In a first, a graphic novelist has been picked as the new national ambassador for Young People's Literature. And the honor goes to a recent UC Berkeley graduate in computer science, Gene Luen Yang.
January 4, 2016
In a first, a graphic novelist has been picked as the new national ambassador for Young People’s Literature, and the honor is going to a UC Berkeley graduate in computer science, Gene Luen Yang.
Now in his 40s, Yang grew up in the Bay Area, the son of immigrants from Taiwan and Hong Kong who met at San Jose State. According to news articles about his selection, he started writing comic books when he was in fifth grade and began self-publishing them some 20 years ago. Themes of cross-culturalism showed up early in his work, and reached their peak in 2006 in
American Born Chinese, which according to the Washington Post explores multiple identities, is widely read in classrooms and was a National Book Award finalist.
Yang majored in computer science at Berkeley, and told the Post he had planned a career in computers. But after a short while working in the field, he realized he was meant to be a teacher. He taught computing, art and math at Bishop O’Dowd High School in Oakland for 17 years before finally going fulltime with his writing recently.
The Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, the Children’s Book Council and Every Child a Reader will inaugurate Yang on Thursday in Washington.
Read the full account of Yang’s honor, his life and his work in the Washington Post.